IPO 及你需要
了解的重点

这是“私人企业”转变为“上市公司”的关键时刻。市场首次真正有机会深入了解 OpenAI、SpaceX 以及新一批 ASX 潜在上市企业的内部情况。

什么是 IPO?

首次公开募股(IPO)是指私人公司首次向公众发售股票。在 IPO 之前,股票通常仅由创始人、早期员工和私人投资者持有;上市后,这些股票便可进入更广泛的公开市场交易。

对交易者而言,IPO 往往伴随着更高的波动性和市场关注度,但也意味着更高风险,因为价格历史有限,市场情绪也可能迅速转变。

US$171.8 billion

2025 年全球 IPO 融资总额,同比增长 39%

US$3 trillion plus

2026 年主要 IPO 候选公司的预估总估值

1,293

2025 年全球上市数量,创下后疫情时期以来最强劲反弹

全球交易所即将到来的 IPO

公司估值预估交易所状态
Imported item 3
~US$350 billionNasdaqRumoured
Imported item 4
~US$140 billionNYSE/NasdaqRumoured
Imported item 5
~US$134 billionNasdaqExpected
Imported item 6
~US$7.9 billionNasdaq and ASX CDIExpected
Imported item 7
~A$6 billionASXExpected
Imported item 8
~A$4 billion plusASXRumoured
OpenAI
Artificial intelligence
~US$850 billionNasdaqExpected
SpaceX
~US$1.5 trillionNasdaqExpected
来源:截至 2026 年 4 月 21 日公开可得的公司公告、交易所资料、可靠媒体报道及市场评论。估值预估、交易所及上市状态仅供参考,可能随时变更,
恕不另行通知。

美国 IPO 候选公司

SpaceX、OpenAI、Anthropic 等

了解更多

ASX IPO 候选公司

Firmus Technologies、Greencross 等

了解更多

上市如何运作

从董事会
会议室到交易所

到了正式上市时,机构投资者通常已完成对公司的评估。了解这六个阶段,有助交易者判断在股票向更广泛市场开放交易前,哪些因素可能已经反映在价格中。

准备

公司选择承销商,以评估其财务状况、公司架构及市场定位。

注册申报

承销商进行尽职调查,并向相关监管机构提交披露文件。

路演

高管向机构投资者和分析师推介公司。这是测试市场需求并形成定价预期的重要阶段,早于散户交易者接触该股票之前。

定价

根据路演反馈,承销商设定最终发行价格,并决定发行股票数量。

上市日

股票开始在所选交易所交易。对大多数交易者而言,这是首次交易该股票的机会。

IPO 后

成为上市公司后,公司必须定期发布财务业绩,并符合交易所相关治理标准。

通过 CFD 交易 IPO

为何 CFD 适合 IPO 波动行情

IPO 上市日通常伴随着剧烈情绪波动及有限的价格历史。这种组合可能使传统买入并持有的方式更难管理风险。CFD 让交易者能够针对价格走势的
任一方向进行交易、灵活控制仓位规模,并根据市场变化快速调整策略。

做多或做空

无论是交易上市初期涨势,还是热潮后的回调,CFD 都让你能够自上市日起在任一方向建立仓位。

较短的时间周期

IPO 波动往往集中在最初几天和几周。CFD 非常适合这类短线、事件驱动型交易机会。

内置风险工具

止损及限价订单可帮助你在进场前界定风险;当市场仍在寻找合理定价时,这一点尤其重要。

涵盖美国与澳大利亚市场

通过一个账户即可交易美国和澳大利亚市场的股票 CFD,包括 Rokt 和 Firmus Technologies 等公司。

准备好参与 IPO 交易了吗?

通过快速执行、具竞争力的定价以及内置风险管理工具,交易美国与澳大利亚股票 CFD。

准备好参与 IPO 交易了吗?

通过快速执行、具竞争力的定价以及内置风险管理工具,交易美国与澳大利亚股票 CFD。

开始使用

新闻与分析

The Fed enters April with rates at 3.50% to 3.75%, Brent crude above US$100 and inflation pressures still not fully solved. March CPI, payrolls, Q1 GDP and the 28 to 29 April FOMC could determine whether rate cuts stay on hold for much of 2026.
Central Banks
Geopolitical events
Fed watch April 2026: Oil, inflation and the FOMC explained

Here is the situation as April begins. A war is affecting one of the world's most important oil chokepoints. Brent crude is trading above US$100. And the Federal Reserve (Fed), which spent much of 2025 engineering a soft landing, is now facing an inflation threat driven less by wages, services or the domestic economy, and more by energy. It is watching an oil shock.

The Fed funds rate sits at 3.50% to 3.75%. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting is on 28 and 29 April and the key question for markets is not whether the Fed will cut, it is whether the Fed can cut, or whether the energy shock may have shut that door for much of 2026.

A heavy run of major data releases lands in April. The March consumer price index (CPI), non-farm payrolls (NFP) and the advance estimate of Q1 gross domestic product (GDP) are the three that matter most. But the FOMC statement on 29 April may be the release that sets the tone for the rest of the year.

Fed Funds Rate

3.50%–3.75%

Next FOMC

28–29 April 2026

Brent crude

Above US$100

Key data events

12 major releases

Growth: Business activity and demand

Think about what the US economy looked like coming into this year: AI-driven capital expenditure (capex) was a major part of the growth narrative, corporate investment intentions looked firm and the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act was already in the mix. On paper, the growth story looked solid.

Then the Strait of Hormuz situation changed the calculus. Not because the US is a net energy importer, it is not, and that structural insulation matters. But what is good for US energy producers can still squeeze margins elsewhere and weigh on global demand. The 30 April advance Q1 gross domestic product (GDP) estimate is now likely to be read through two lenses: how strong was the economy before the shock, and what it may signal about the quarters ahead.

Key dates (AEST)

2
Apr
US international trade in goods and services (February)
Bureau of Economic Analysis  ·  10:30 pm AEDT
Medium
30
Apr
Q1 GDP — advance estimate
Bureau of Economic Analysis  ·  10:30 pm AEST
High

What markets look for

  • Resilience in Q1 GDP despite the elevated interest rate environment and early energy cost pressures
  • Trade balance movements linked to shifting global tariff frameworks
  • Business investment intentions following passage of the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act"
  • Early signs of capacity constraints emerging in technology-heavy sectors

How this data may move markets

Scenario Treasuries USD Equities
Stronger than expected growth Yields rise Firmer Mixed - depends on inflation read
Softer growth/GDP miss Yields fall Softer Risk off if stagflation narrative builds

Labour: Payrolls and employment

February's jobs report was, depending on how you read it, either a blip or a warning sign. Non-farm payrolls (NFP) fell by 92,000, unemployment edged up to 4.4% and the official line was that weather played a role. That may be true but here is what also happened. The labour market suddenly looked a little less convincing as the main argument for keeping rates elevated.

The 3 April employment report for March is now genuinely consequential. A bounce back to positive payroll growth would probably steady nerves and a second consecutive soft print, particularly against a backdrop of higher energy prices, would start to build a very uncomfortable narrative for the Fed. It would be looking at slower jobs growth and an inflation threat at the same time. That is not a comfortable place to be.

Key dates (AEST)

3
Apr
March employment situation (NFP and unemployment rate)
Bureau of Labor Statistics  ·  10:30 pm AEDT
High
30
Apr
Q1 employment cost index
Bureau of Labor Statistics  ·  10:30 pm AEST
Medium

What markets look for

  • A return to positive payroll growth, or confirmation that February's softness was the start of a trend
  • Stabilisation or further movement in the unemployment rate from 4.4%
  • Average hourly earnings growth relative to core inflation — the wage-price dynamic the Fed watches closely
  • Weekly initial jobless claims as a real-time signal of whether layoff activity is rising

Inflation: CPI, PPI and PCE

Here is the uncomfortable truth about where inflation sits right now. Core personal consumption expenditures (PCE), the Fed's preferred gauge, was already running at 3.1% year on year in January, before any oil shock had fed through. The Fed had not fully solved its inflation problem, rather, it had slowed it down. That is a different thing.

And now, on top of a not-quite-solved inflation problem, oil prices have moved sharply higher. Energy prices can feed into the consumer price index (CPI) relatively quickly, through petrol, transport and logistics costs that can eventually show up in the price of nearly everything. The 10 April CPI print for March is probably the most important single data release of the month, it is the one that may tell us whether the energy shock is already showing up in the numbers the Fed watches.

Key dates (AEST)

10
Apr
Consumer price index (CPI) — March
Bureau of Labor Statistics  ·  10:30 pm AEST
High
14
Apr
Producer price index (PPI) — March
Bureau of Labor Statistics  ·  10:30 pm AEST
Medium
30
Apr
Personal income and outlays incl. PCE price index — March
Bureau of Economic Analysis  ·  10:30 pm AEST
High

What markets look for

  • Monthly CPI acceleration driven by energy and shelter components — the two stickiest inputs
  • PPI as a forward-looking signal: producer cost pressure tends to feed into consumer prices with a lag
  • PCE trends relative to the Fed's 2% target, particularly the core reading that strips out food and energy
  • Any sign that AI-related pricing power is feeding into corporate margins in ways that sustain elevated core readings

How this data may move markets

Scenario Treasuries USD Gold
Cooling core inflation Yields fall Softer Supportive
Sticky or rising inflation Yields rise Firmer Headwind

Policy, trade and earnings

April is also the start of US earnings season, and this quarter's results carry an unusual amount of weight. Investors have been pouring capital into AI infrastructure on the basis that returns are coming. The question is when. With geopolitical volatility driving a rotation away from growth-oriented technology and towards energy and defence, JPMorgan Chase's 14 April earnings will be read as much for what management says about the macro environment as for the numbers themselves.

Then there is the FOMC meeting on 28 and 29 April. After the early-April run of data, including NFP, CPI and producer price index (PPI), the Fed will have more than enough information to update its language. Whether it signals that rate cuts could remain on hold through 2026, or whether it leaves the door slightly ajar, may be the most consequential communication of the quarter.

Geopolitical volatility has already pushed investors to reassess growth-heavy positioning. The estimated US$650 billion AI infrastructure buildout is also coming under heavier scrutiny on return on investment. If earnings season disappoints on that front, and if the FOMC signals a prolonged hold, the combination could test risk appetite heading into May.

Monitor this month (AEST)

  • 14 April - JPMorgan Chase Q1 earnings

    The first major bank to report. Management commentary on credit conditions, consumer spending, and the macro outlook will set the tone for financial sector earnings and broader market sentiment.

  • 15 April - Bank of America Q1 earnings

    A read on consumer credit conditions and household financial health, particularly relevant given rising energy costs and the 4.4% unemployment rate.

  • 28-29 April - FOMC meeting and policy statement

    The month's most consequential event. The statement and any updated forward guidance may effectively confirm whether rate cuts remain a possibility for 2026.

  • Ongoing - Strait of Hormuz tanker traffic

    A live indicator of energy supply risk. Any escalation or resolution carries immediate implications for oil prices, inflation expectations, and the Fed's options.

  • Ongoing - Sovereign AI export restrictions

    Developing policy around technology export curbs may affect capital expenditure plans for US technology firms, with knock-on implications for growth and employment in the sector.

The Bigger Picture

Geopolitical volatility has forced a rotation into energy and defence at the expense of growth oriented technology positions. The estimated US$650 billion AI infrastructure buildout is increasingly being scrutinised for returns on investment. If earnings season disappoints on that front, and if the FOMC signals a prolonged hold, the combination could test risk appetite heading into May.

Big US data release ahead? Stay focused.
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GO Markets
March 30, 2026
Market insights
AI
Top 5 semiconductor stocks in Asia: AI's biggest beneficiaries

Asia dominates the global semiconductor supply. Five companies, spanning Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan, sit at the critical juncture of the AI buildout, controlling everything from fabrication to the equipment that makes chips possible. 

Quick facts

  • TSMC delivered $90 billion in revenue in 2024, with a 59% gross margin and shares up 55% in 2025.
  • Advantest shares doubled (+102%) in 2025 as AI-driven chip testing demand surged.
  • SK Hynix is Nvidia's primary HBM supplier, positioning it at the centre of the AI accelerator boom.

1. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM)

TSMC is the world's largest contract chip manufacturer, producing advanced semiconductors for Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm. As a pure-play foundry, it leads in 5-nanometer (5nm) and 3- nanometer (3nm) chip production, with smaller nodes in development.

The company posted $90 billion in revenue for 2024 with a 59% gross margin and 36% return on equity. 

Shares delivered a total return of 55% in 2025, with analysts forecasting a further ~30% revenue increase in 2026, underpinned by its $100 billion US expansion programme.

The key risk for the company is its geopolitical exposure, with Taiwan Strait tensions remaining the sector's most-watched tail risk.

What to watch

  • US expansion progress: Any delays, cost blowouts, or political friction concerning TSMC's $100 billion Arizona investment could weigh on sentiment.
  • Customer order visibility: Watch for any guidance updates from Apple, Nvidia, or AMD on chip orders, as TSMC's revenue is highly concentrated among a handful of clients.
  • Geopolitical developments: Any escalation of Taiwan Strait tensions could trigger sharp moves regardless of fundamentals.
  • Next-node ramp: Progress on 2nm production and yield rates will be a key signal for TSMC's ability to maintain its technology lead.

2. Samsung Electronics (KR:005930)

Samsung is one of the few companies globally that both designs and fabricates chips at scale. It competes across DRAM, NAND flash, and logic chip segments, and remains a core supplier to global tech giants.

Samsung's wide scope is a strength, but also a complexity. Its memory division faces margin pressure from inventory cycles, while its foundry business continues to lag TSMC in leading-edge yields. 

The AI-driven memory boom may provide a tailwind, though execution in HBM production has been slower than local rival SK Hynix.

What to watch

  • HBM qualification progress: Samsung has been working to qualify its HBM3E chips with Nvidia. Any confirmation of a major supply win could be a meaningful catalyst.
  • Memory pricing trends: DRAM and NAND spot prices could be an indicator of Samsung's margin trajectory.
  • Foundry yield improvements: Samsung's logic foundry business has struggled with yields at advanced nodes; any credible progress here could re-rate the division.
  • Management guidance: Following a period of earnings volatility, clarity on capex plans and divisional targets at upcoming results will be closely watched.
Source: Counterpoint research

3. Advantest (ATEYY)

Tokyo-based Advantest makes testing equipment used to verify chips meet performance and quality standards. 

It supplies to Samsung, Intel, Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments, allowing it to benefit from chip industry growth broadly, regardless of which foundry wins market share.

Advantest shares doubled in 2025 (+102%), and it raised its sales forecast by 21.8% and earnings forecast by 70.6% for the year ending March 2026.

What to watch

  • Order backlog updates: Any contraction in Advantest's backlog could be an early warning sign after the strong 2025 run.
  • AI chip testing demand: As chips grow more complex, testing time per chip increases. Monitor whether AI accelerator volumes from TSMC and Samsung start to drive outsized testing demand.
  • FY2026 guidance: The next forecast update will be critical in confirming whether 2025's upgrade cycle has further to run.
Advantest projected income statement | MarketScreener

4. Tokyo Electron (T:8035)

Tokyo Electron is among the world's largest suppliers of semiconductor production equipment, specialising in deposition, etching, and cleaning tools. 

Every major chipmaker, including TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix, depends on TEL's systems to scale production.

As chipmakers invest billions to expand capacity, TEL's order book grows. The risk lies in potential US export restrictions on advanced equipment sales to China, which remains one of the primary revenue segments for the company.

What to watch

  • US export control policy: China accounts for a significant portion of TEL's revenue. Any tightening of equipment export rules is the most immediate risk to watch.
  • Chipmaker capex announcements: TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix's capital expenditure plans for 2026 directly translate into equipment orders. Any cuts could flow through to TEL's order book.
  • New tool adoption cycles: Monitor whether TEL's next-generation deposition and etch tools are being adopted at leading-edge fabs.

5. SK Hynix (KR:000660)

SK Hynix is the world's second-largest memory chip maker and has emerged as arguably the clearest AI-era beneficiary in the memory space. 

It is Nvidia's primary supplier of High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) chips, the specialised memory used in AI accelerators like the H100 and B200.

HBM demand has driven a dramatic re-rating of SK Hynix's revenue profile and market standing. With AI infrastructure spending showing little sign of slowing heading into 2026, the company's HBM franchise could remain a key differentiator. 

However, capacity constraints and the risk of Samsung and Micron closing the HBM gap are the primary concerns to watch.

What to watch

  • Nvidia supply relationship: Any shift in Nvidia's supplier mix toward Samsung or Micron could be a key risk event.
  • HBM4 development: The race to next-generation HBM is already underway. Watch for updates on SK Hynix's HBM4 readiness and whether it can maintain its lead.
  • Conventional memory pricing: SK Hynix still derives meaningful revenue from standard DRAM and NAND. Spot price trends could be a gauge of the broader memory cycle.

Bottom line

TSMC, SK Hynix, Samsung, Advantest, and Tokyo Electron collectively control the chokepoints of the AI buildout. 

The expected increase in AI infrastructure may support demand, but investors should weigh the risks carefully. 

Geopolitical exposure, US export restrictions, and the pace of HBM competition could all move the needle.

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GO Markets
March 20, 2026
Market insights
Technology
Beyond Nvidia: 5 AI stocks to watch in 2026

So, here’s the thing...

If you have been following the tech story for the last decade, you have been trained to look at a very specific, very small patch of real estate in Northern California. But as we sit here in early 2026, the "connect-the-dots" moment for investors is this: the AI trade has stopped being about shiny software demos in Palo Alto and has started being about the physical industrialisation of compute.

Want to know more? Read our 2026 AI playbook

What changed, and why it matters

We have entered the "Year of Proof". The world’s largest companies, the hyperscalers, are projected to spend a staggering US$650 billion on capital expenditures this year. But here’s the part most people miss: that money is not staying in Silicon Valley. It’s flowing to the "picks and shovels" players in Idaho, Washington, Colorado and even overseas.

If you want to understand where the actual return on investment (ROI) may be landing this earnings season, you have to look outside the 650 area code. The shift from AI hype to AI industrialisation is changing the map.

The full AI stack: from capex to consulting — GO Markets

Five companies · AI infrastructure play · 2026

The full AI stack: from capex to consulting

Infrastructure builders compared to the implementation bridge across the AI value chain


Note: Hyperscalers shown as 2026 CapEx spend. Accenture shown as cumulative advanced AI bookings ($11.5B through Q1 FY2026), reflecting its role as the adoption layer rather than the infrastructure layer.
Infrastructure (2026 CapEx projected) Implementation bridge (cumulative AI bookings)

Hyperscaler CapEx: Early 2026 analyst estimates, midpoint of ranges. Amazon approx. 100% YoY, Alphabet approx. 100%, Meta approx. 87%, Microsoft approx. 50%.
Accenture: Cumulative advanced AI bookings $11.5B through Q1 FY2026. Q1 AI bookings $2.2B (up 76% YoY), AI revenue $1.1B (up 120% YoY) across 1,300+ clients.

Five companies shaping the next phase of AI

Micron Technology (MU), Boise, Idaho

Micron is the "memory backbone" of the current cycle. While everyone was watching the chip designers, many overlooked the fact that AI chips are far less useful without high-bandwidth memory (HBM). Micron is currently viewed by some analysts as a strong buy because its capacity is reportedly sold out through the end of 2026. Analysts are also eyeing a 457% jump in earnings per share (EPS) as the memory cycle reaches what some describe as a robust peak.

Microsoft (MSFT), Redmond, Washington

Microsoft is the enterprise backbone of this transition. It has moved beyond simple chatbots and is now building what analysts call "Intelligence Factories". While the stock has faced pressure recently over capacity constraints, underlying demand for Azure AI is reportedly still running ahead of capacity. The broader bull case is that Microsoft is moving into "Agentic AI", systems that do not just talk to users but may also execute multi-step business workflows.

Which Asian companies are betting big on artificial intelligence?

Amazon (AMZN), Seattle, Washington

Amazon is playing a long-term game of vertical integration. To reduce its reliance on expensive third-party hardware, it’s building its own AI chips in-house. Amazon Web Services (AWS) remains the primary driver of profitability, and the company is using its retail data to train specialised models that many Silicon Valley start-ups may struggle to replicate.

Palantir Technologies (PLTR), Denver, Colorado

If Micron provides the memory and Microsoft the platform, Palantir provides the "operating system" for the modern AI factory. The company has posted strong momentum, with US commercial sales recently growing 93% year over year. It’s often framed as a bridge between raw data and corporate profitability, which remains a key focus for investors in 2026.

Accenture (ACN), Dublin, Ireland

You cannot just "plug in" AI. Businesses often need to redesign processes around it, and that’s where Accenture comes in.

The company is viewed as an implementation bridge, with one analyst arguing that "GenAI needs Accenture" to move from pilot programs to production though the cautionary angle is that the AI story has not fully excited investors here yet because consulting revenue can take longer to show up than chip sales.

What could happen next?

The chart maps the three time horizons likely to shape the next phase of the AI industrialisation trade.

In the near term, markets are still reacting to chipmaker earnings, guidance, and any signs of capacity strain. Over the next month, attention shifts to the real-world inputs behind AI growth, especially power, financing, and infrastructure. By the 60-day window, the key question is whether AI spending is broadening into a wider market re-rating or running ahead of near-term returns.

Across all three periods, the focus is the same: proof. Investors are looking for signs that AI capital expenditure is translating into real demand for energy, land, and industrial capacity. That is why updates from companies tied to power and data centre buildout matter more than ever.

What could happen next — GO Markets

Scenario planning · March 2026

What could happen next

Three time horizons, three scenarios to watch across the AI industrialisation cycle


Next 2 weeks

Chipmaker reports

Possible

Market volatility continues as traders digest the latest reports from chipmakers like Micron

Upside scenario

"Bulletproof" guidance from remaining infrastructure names triggers a sector-wide relief rally

Watch for

Any mention of "capacity constraints" or "supply bottlenecks" in earnings calls

Next 30 days

Energy and rates

Possible

Focus shifts to "real economy" energy players like NextEra that power the data centres

Downside scenario

Rising oil prices from Middle East conflict act as a tax on tech margins, rotating into defensives

Action point

Monitor Fed language on rates. Higher for longer makes $650B capex bills far more expensive to finance

Next 60 days

The great dispersion

Possible

Market rewards companies with real AI revenue and punishes those still stuck in experimentation

Upside scenario

NextEra Energy (NEE) data centre announcements in late April/May trigger a utility renaissance rally

Downside scenario

An "air pocket" in profits occurs where debt-funded investment outpaces revenue gains

Watch

May reports from Texas Pacific Land (TPL) — is data centre land demand still "red hot"?

Action point

Review your portfolio for geographic diversity. The AI story is now a global power race

The psychological trap

The emotional trap many traders fall into right now is recency bias. You have seen NVIDIA and the "Magnificent 7" win for so long that it feels like they are the only way to play this. But the "obvious" trade is often the one that has already been priced in. Before acting, ask yourself: "Am I buying this stock because I understand its role in the physical AI supply chain, or because I’m afraid of missing the next leg of a rally that started two years ago?"

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Disclaimer: This content is general information only and should not be relied on as personal financial advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any financial product. References to companies or themes, including AI-related stocks, are illustrative only. Share and derivative markets can move sharply, and concentrated sectors such as AI and technology may experience elevated volatility, valuation risk, and liquidity risk. If you trade derivatives such as CFDs, leverage can magnify both gains and losses. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

GO Markets
March 19, 2026
Market insights
Technology
Top 5 AI stocks in Asia: which companies are betting big on artificial intelligence?

While all eyes are on the US AI narrative dominated by Nvidia, Microsoft, and Google, Asia has quietly been moving on AI and is home to some of the world’s most aggressive AI bets.

Quick facts

  • SoftBank has committed $41 billion to OpenAI, securing approximately an 11% ownership stake.
  • Alibaba plans to invest more than $50 billion in AI infrastructure over the coming years.
  • Baidu's Core AI-powered business revenue grew 48% year over year in Q4, with ~70% of search results now AI-generated.

1. SoftBank Group (TYO: 9984)

SoftBank is the most AI-committed company in Asia by capital deployed and ambition. CEO Masayoshi Son has declared the company in "total offence mode," having completed a $41 billion investment into OpenAI for approximately an 11% ownership stake. 

Son has also launched a $100 billion initiative aimed at building a vertically integrated AI semiconductor champion (Project Izanagi), repositioning SoftBank as an "AI-era industrial holding company." 

SoftBank's fortunes are now deeply tied to the success of OpenAI and Son's ability to execute his semiconductor plan that puts it in direct competition with established players.

What to monitor

  • OpenAI's trajectory: Any shift in OpenAI's competitive position, valuation, or path to profitability has direct implications for SoftBank's balance sheet.
  • Project Izanagi progress: Watch for partner announcements, funding milestones, and whether Son can attract the engineering and manufacturing talent needed.
  • Arm Holdings performance: SoftBank also has a listed stake in Arm. Arm's data centre and AI chip licensing momentum is worth tracking.
  • Debt levels and Vision Fund exposure: SoftBank carries significant leverage. Rising interest rates or a correction in AI valuations could pressure the group's net asset value.

2. Alibaba Group (BABA)

Alibaba has committed more than US$50 billion to AI infrastructure, making it one of the largest AI capex programmes in the world. 

Its Qwen family of large language models underpins a rebuilt AI-focused cloud platform, and the company has partnered with Nvidia on physical AI projects. 

Alibaba Cloud is also the leading cloud provider in China. The key commercial question is whether Alibaba's can convert this cloud leadership into durable revenue growth.

However, it will have to navigate ongoing regulatory scrutiny in China and competition from local rivals like Huawei and ByteDance.

What to monitor

  • Cloud AI revenue growth: The clearest signal of whether the $50 billion investment is translating into commercial traction.
  • Qwen model adoption: Enterprise and developer uptake of the Qwen model family could be an indicator of Alibaba's AI platform stickiness.
  • Regulatory environment: Beijing's approach to large tech platforms and any renewed regulatory action could disrupt execution and sentiment.
  • US-China tech tensions: Nvidia partnership activity and access to advanced AI chips could be affected by further export controls.

3. Baidu (BIDU)

Baidu has made the most visible AI transformation of any company on this list. It has released a 2.4 trillion parameter omni-modal model (ERNIE 5.0) with approximately 70% of its search results now delivered as AI-generated rich media. 

Beyond search, its Apollo Go robotaxi service is now partnering with Uber to expand into Dubai and the UK.

Its Core AI-powered business generated RMB 11.3 billion in Q4 revenue, up 48% YoY. The question now is whether that momentum is sustainable and whether the robotaxi business can scale economically.

What to monitor

  • ERNIE monetisation: Watch for updates on enterprise API revenue and advertising yield improvements driven by AI-generated search.
  • Apollo Go expansion: Rider volume growth and cost per ride will indicate whether unit economics are improving.
  • Search market share: Competition from ByteDance and emerging AI-native search alternatives in China is a potential structural risk.

4. Tencent Holdings (HK: 0700)

Tencent's AI play is to allocate its GPU capacity to itself. This allows it to convert AI directly into efficiency gains across its ecosystem. 

With WeChat's 1.4 billion users providing an unmatched data engine, Tencent is embedding AI across gaming, payments, cloud, and search in a way that is difficult to replicate. 

This approach also offers greater resilience against AI chip export restrictions, since the compute stays internal.

The AI upside here is arguably underappreciated because it is embedded rather than a separate segment, which could also mean the market may find it harder to isolate and value that contribution.

What to monitor

  • Advertising revenue trends: The most measurable near-term AI benefit is from ad targeting improvements translating into sustained advertising revenue growth.
  • WeChat ecosystem AI integration: Watch for new AI-native features within WeChat, including search, mini-programs, and payments, as signals of platform deepening.
  • Regulatory and geopolitical risk: Tencent operates under ongoing scrutiny from Chinese regulators and faces restrictions in some Western markets.

5. Kakao (KRX: 035720)

Kakao is South Korea's dominant AI and internet platform, operating KakaoTalk, which is used by approximately 95% of South Koreans.

It is one of the most aggressively AI-focused non-Chinese tech companies in Asia, investing heavily in LLM development and AI-native services. 

The domestic dominance of KakaoTalk provides a captive distribution platform for AI products in a way few companies outside China can match. The key question is whether Kakao can monetise that distribution advantage before global competitors close the gap.

What to monitor

  • KakaoAI product rollouts: New AI-native features within KakaoTalk and Kakao's broader service suite are the most direct signal of commercial AI progress.
  • Cloud division growth: Kakao's cloud business is the infrastructure layer for its AI ambitions. Revenue growth and enterprise customer additions are key metrics.
  • LLM competitive positioning: Monitor how Kakao's models benchmark against global and regional peers, and whether Korean enterprise customers are adopting them at scale.
  • Corporate governance: Kakao has faced governance-related scrutiny in recent years; any developments here could affect sentiment independently of AI progress.

Bottom line

Asia's AI landscape is far more complicated than a simple "follow the AI spend" narrative suggests. 

China's top companies are innovating rapidly but operate under regulatory and geopolitical constraints. Japan's SoftBank is making the biggest single bet, but at a level of concentration risk that demands scrutiny. And South Korea's Kakao offers a differentiated, lower-geopolitical-risk angle.

The AI push in Asia is real. But the range of outcomes across these five names is wide, making it pivotal to understand each company's specific exposure and risk profile, not just its AI narrative.

GO Markets
March 19, 2026
Trading
Top 5 ASX IPO candidates in 2026

From AI infrastructure to pet care, semiconductors, and gold exploration, here are the five top candidates most likely to list on the ASX in 2026.

What is an Initial public offering (IPO)?

1. Firmus Technologies

Firmus Technologies is building AI-powered data centre infrastructure in Tasmania, and it may be one of the most strategically positioned tech companies in Australia right now.

Firmus is an Nvidia Cloud Partner and has joined the GPU maker's Lepton marketplace. The company has designed its modular, liquid-everywhere AI Factory platform to evolve with Nvidia's latest architectures, including Nvidia Spectrum-X Ethernet networking.

A September 2025 raise of A$330m closed at a post-money valuation of A$1.85 billion for the company. By November 2025, after a further A$500m raise, that valuation had trebled to approximately A$6 billion

A subsequent A$100m investment from Maas Group in early 2026 confirmed the November valuation. Firmus is reported to be contemplating an ASX IPO within the next 12 months and, given the A$6 billion private valuation, any public raise is expected to be well above A$1 billion.

With Australia's growing demand for sovereign AI compute capacity and Tasmania's cool climate and renewable energy advantage for large-scale data centre operations, Firmus stands as one of the largest-scale ASX IPO candidates in 2026.

However, although market interest in Firmus appears to be growing, timing is everything when it comes to IPOs. Watch for confirmation of exact IPO timing, AI data centres sentiment, and whether Nvidia signals deepening its involvement as a strategic anchor investor post-listing.

2. Rokt

Sydney-founded Rokt has quietly become one of Australia's most valuable private tech companies. The e-commerce adtech platform aimed at helping brands monetise the “transaction moment” is now valued at ~US$7.9 billion.

A term sheet prepared by MA Financial projected an exit share price of US$72 under base-case scenarios, when shares are freed from escrow in November 2027. 

Rokt is expected to potentially dual-list in the US and on the ASX in 2026, possibly as soon as the first half of the year. IG The most widely discussed structure is a primary Nasdaq listing with an ASX CDI (CHESS Depositary Interest) structure for Australian investors, rather than a full dual listing.

Rokt’s revenue for the year ending August 2025 is projected at US$743m (up 48% year-over-year), with EBITDA forecast at US$100m and a gross profit margin of approximately 43%. It is currently projected to cross the $US1 billion annual revenue milestone by August 2026.

Amazon, Live Nation, and Uber are all reported to be Rokt customers, and the company has expanded rapidly across North America and Europe.

Whether Rokt opts for a primary Nasdaq listing with an ASX CDI structure, or a full dual listing, could significantly affect liquidity and local investor access.

3. Greencross

Greencross, the business behind Petbarn, City Farmers, and Greencross Vets, is preparing to relist on the ASX after being taken private by US private equity firm TPG in 2019. 

TPG currently owns 55% of Greencross, while AustralianSuper and the Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan (HOOPP) hold the remaining 45%. 

The company reported revenue of A$2 billion for the 2025 financial year, a modest increase from A$1.95 billion in 2024. TPG paid A$675 million in equity value for the business in 2019; it sold a 45% stake in 2022 at a valuation of more than A$3.5 billion. The proposed IPO implies a valuation of more than A$4 billion.

TPG is targeting an initial public offering of at least A$700 million. The IPO will mark Greencross's return to the ASX after an eight-year absence. TPG's relatively small raise size suggests the firm is banking on strong aftermarket performance before fully exiting.

TPG's exit timeline announcement is still a watch for whether a 2026 IPO is on the cards. And whether the company pursues a traditional IPO or a trade sale, which remains an alternative path.

4. Morse Micro

Morse Micro is a Sydney-based semiconductor company developing Wi-Fi HaLow chips designed for IoT applications across agriculture, logistics, smart cities, and industrial monitoring.

Morse Micro held a Series C round in September 2025, raising US$88 million, followed in November 2025 by a US$32 million pre-IPO raise, taking total funding to over A$300 million

It is targeting an ASX listing in the next 12–18 months. The Series C was led by Japanese chip giant MegaChips and the National Reconstruction Fund Corporation.

Global IoT device connections forecast to exceed 30 billion by 2030, and Morse Micro would be a rare ASX-listed pure-play semiconductor company, which could attract significant interest from tech-focused fund managers.

Global IoT market forecast (in billions of connected IoT devices) | IOT Analytics

Morse Micro’s Revenue traction with tier-one hardware partners ahead of listing is a watch, and whether the company seeks a concurrent US listing given the depth of US semiconductor investor appetite.

5. Bison Resources

Bison Resources is a newly incorporated US-focused gold and precious metals explorer currently in the middle of its ASX IPO. 

The offer closes on 20 March 2026, with an ASX listing targeted for mid-April 2026. At an indicative market capitalisation of A$13.25 million on full subscription, Bison is the most speculative name on this list by a significant margin.

The company holds four exploration projects in north-east Nevada, within the Carlin Trend (one of the world's most prolific gold-producing belts), responsible for approximately 75% of US gold output. 

The IPO seeks to raise A$4.5 to A$5.5 million (22.5 to 27.5 million shares at A$0.20 per share). The team has prior experience at Sun Silver (ASX: SS1) and Black Bear Minerals, giving it a track record in ASX junior mining listings out of Nevada.

Global IPOs: What are the biggest IPOs happening globally in 2026?

Bottom line

Australia's 2026 IPO calendar spans the full risk spectrum. A Nvidia-backed AI infrastructure play, a billion-dollar e-commerce platform, and a junior gold explorer with its IPO already underway. 

Each candidate reflects a different stage of maturity and a different investor profile. Together, they suggest the ASX could see a meaningful injection of new listings across sectors that have been largely absent from the local market in recent years.

GO Markets
March 11, 2026
Market insights
Shares
Top 5 IPO candidates in 2026

The global initial public offering (IPO) market saw a resurgence in 2025. Proceeds increased 39% to US$171.8 billion across 1,293 listings, the sharpest annual rebound since the post-pandemic boom. 

That momentum is now building into 2026 for what some financial analysts speculate could be the biggest IPO year in history.

A handful of mega-cap private companies, including SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic, are exploring going public this year, with combined valuations that could exceed US$3 trillion.

2025 IPO market data

Top IPO candidates in 2026

1. SpaceX - US$1.5T valuation

SpaceX revenue reportedly hit US$15 billion in 2025, with analysts projecting an increase to US$22-24 billion in 2026. The company has been cash-flow positive for years, driven largely by its Starlink satellite broadband network.

Following its February 2026 all-stock acquisition of Elon Musk's AI company xAI, the combined entity also encompasses Grok AI and the social media platform X (Twitter).

Leading financial analysts have reported SpaceX is targeting a mid-2026 listing. Its next funding round is estimated to raise around US$50 billion, putting its initial market cap at US$1.5 trillion, which would make it the second-highest IPO valuation of all time. 

This valuation would mean SpaceX would trade at 62–68 times projected 2026 sales. A steep premium that requires massive growth assumptions around Starlink and longer-term space-based AI ambitions.

2. OpenAI - US$850B valuation

OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, now reports more than 800 million weekly active users of its groundbreaking AI product. 

Originally a nonprofit research lab, it has restructured into a for-profit entity developing large language models for consumer, enterprise, and developer applications.

OpenAI is reportedly targeting a Q4 2026 IPO, finalising a US$100 billion-plus funding round (its largest ever), which would put its valuation at US$850 billion. 

However, OpenAI still needs to overcome some near-term hurdles to achieve the potential associated with such a high valuation. 

It projects US$14 billion in losses in 2026 and does not expect profitability before 2029. It is facing intensified competition from Google Gemini and other AI startups cutting into its market share, and Elon Musk has filed a lawsuit against the company seeking up to US$134 billion in damages. 

3. Anthropic - US$350B valuation

While OpenAI has leaned into consumer products, Anthropic has built its business around enterprise adoption. Roughly 80% of its revenue comes from business customers, and eight of the Fortune 10 are now Claude users.

Anthropic closed a US$30 billion funding round in February 2026 at a US$350 billion valuation, more than double its US$183 billion valuation from five months earlier. 

Anthropic’s annualised revenue has been growing at 10x per year since 2024, well outpacing OpenAI’s growth of 3.4x per year. If this trend continues, Anthropic revenue could pass OpenAI by mid-2026. However, since July 2025, Anthropic’s growth rate has slowed down to 7x per year.

Anthropic projected growth if revenue trend continues | Epoch.ai

Anthropic has engaged law firm Wilson Sonsini to begin IPO preparations, and the recent appointment of former Microsoft CFO Chris Liddell to its board signals a governance push ahead of a potential late-2026 listing.

The company is not yet profitable, but its enterprise-heavy revenue mix and rapid growth trajectory make it one of the most closely watched IPO candidates this year.

4. Stripe - US$140B valuation

Stripe processed US$1.4 trillion in total payment volume in 2024, roughly 1.3% of global GDP. Half the Fortune 100 now use Stripe, and recent moves into stablecoins and AI-to-AI "agentic commerce" payments are expanding its addressable market.

Stripe remains one of the most anticipated fintech IPOs globally, but the company has shown a lack of urgency to list in the past. Co-founder John Collison said at Davos in January 2026 that Stripe was "still not in any rush." 

Source: CB Insights

Rather than pursuing an IPO, Stripe has conducted tender offers every six months at rising valuations, providing employee liquidity without surrendering control. 

These frequent tenders effectively function as a private-market alternative to going public. However, a traditional IPO is still on the cards in 2026, with the company's February tender offer valuing it at US$140 billion or more, and profitability since 2024 removing one of the key barriers to listing.

5. Databricks - US$134B valuation

Databricks completed a US$5 billion funding round in February 2026 at a US$134 billion valuation. 

The company's annualised revenue exceeded US$5.4 billion in January 2026, growing a massive 65% year-on-year, with AI products generating US$1.4 billion. 

CEO Ali Ghodsi has said the company is prepared to go public "when the time is right," with most analysts expecting a H2 2026 listing. At US$134 billion, Databricks is valued at more than twice publicly traded rival Snowflake (~US$58 billion).

Bottom line

2026 has the potential to be the biggest IPO year by valuation in history. With the most likely candidates, SpaceX and Databricks, matching the total valuation of all 2025 IPOs on their own.

If major AI players like OpenAI and Anthropic, as well as world-leading payment fintech Stripe, also list before the end of the year, 2026 could see over US$3 trillion in total value added to global markets through IPOs alone.

GO Markets
February 26, 2026

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